Hendersonville - Flat Rock North
Carolina
Looking for a home in
the friendly town of Hendersonville and Flat Rock NC.
Enjoy the
hospitality and tranquility of Historic
Hendersonville and the Village of Flat Rock
nestled in the heart of the Blue Ridge National Heritage
Area in Western North Carolina, 22 miles south of
Asheville, NC. Our area, known for its gentle climate,
beautiful scenery, a richness in culture & history,
ample recreational facilities, and friendly people has
been a popular place to live for well over a
century.
Premiere Hendersonville
- Flat Rock NC
Real Estate Agents
| |
|
 |
You
can find all Hendersonville homes and land for
sale at my site. Take a moment to browse the
many choices in Hendersonville NC available on
the multiple listing service.
John Abshire - REALTOR
Cell: 828-699-4894
www.myhendersonvillencrealestate.com |
| |
|
 |
Specializing in
finding just that right home for your needs.
I've been finding homes for people in the
Asheville, Hendersonville area for 22 years.
I can help you find yours.
Eunice Pearson
ABR, CRS, GRI, ePRO
Cell: 828-230-4894 - Office 828-684-2640
www.ashevillehome.com |
| |
|
Hendersonville NC
The village of Hendersonville received its
charter from the General Assembly as the City of
Hendersonville and was officially recognized as the
county seat of Henderson County on January 7, 1847.
Hendersonville’s original charter fixed the corporate
city limits to be a half mile from the courthouse, but
not to go beyond Mud Creek. The charter stated that five
commissioners were to be elected at once as the
governing body of the town.
The elected five commissioners took the oath of office
and appointed a magistrate and a town constable. The
constable also served as the city tax collector, city
treasurer and the overseer of the city streets.
Hendersonville First Baptist Church was the first church
organized within the city limits of the new county seat.
The church was founded in 1844; the first services were
held in the courthouse. In 1848 the city deeded the
church a lot that was located between South Main Street,
East Barnwell Street and Mud Creek. The church built its
first structure a year later and started the first
graveyard within the city limits.
During the 1920’s the graves were removed so that King
Street, which ended at East Barnwell Street, could be
extended through to South Main Street as it is today.
Flat Rock NC
Flat Rock NC began about a century and half ago
with large summer estates being built in the English
manner by the affluent Charlestonians, Europeans and
prominent plantation owners of the South’s low country.
The first great estate was built in 1827 by Charles
Baring of Baring Brothers Banking firm of London,
consisting of 3000 acres, which he named Mountain Lodge.
Baring also built a private chapel on his estate which
is now St. John In The Wilderness Episcopal Church.
The second large estate, called Argyle was built by
Judge Mitchell King of Charleston, SC. He later donated
the land on which Hendersonville was built and directed
the laying out of Main Street.
Many other coastal families soon followed, until the
settlement grew to about fifty estates. The families of
South Carolina’s Low Country came to Flat Rock to escape
the sweltering heat, yellow fever and malaria, which
were running rampant. Summers in Flat Rock became a
round of Southern gaiety in antebellum days. South
Carolina’s Low Country gentry call Flat Rock The Little
Charleston of the Mountains.
Most of these old estate homes still stand, surrounded
by wide lawns, gardens, towering trees and white pillar
porches, shielding their visibility from the highway. A
few of these gracious homes remain in the possession of
the families of the original owners. Many of these grand
estates are now lovely planned communities.
The whole district of Flat Rock is included in
the National Register of Historic Places, and Historic
Flat Rock Incorporated is striving to preserve what
remains in this area of the Old South.
Flat Rock is built around a tremendous outcrop of
granite which is said to have been the site of Cherokee
gatherings. A great deal of rock has been blasted away
and used for highway material. The main rock can be
found on the grounds of the Flat Rock Playhouse.
Source:
Hendersonville-Flat Rock NC |
|